“…In our series 9 of 24 cases (37.5%) had a syndromic diagnosis and 12 (50%) were in association with urinary tract anomalies, thus prenatal management should involve a multidisplinary approach. In a genotypically male fetus isolated hypospadia is not commonly seen prenatally, but it may be detected in fetuses conceived after intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) (Wennerholm et al, 2000) or where there is IUGR (Calzolari et al, 1986) as in three of our cases (1-3), particularly when uniparental disomy (UPD) (Hansen et al, 1997) or confined placental mosaicism (CPM) (Kalousek et al, 1991) can be aetiological factors. The aetiology in a genetic female fetus Bowing of the femur and tibia, talipes, hypoplastic scapulae, 11 pairs of ribs, micrognathia, small chest, cardiac anomalies is certainly narrower than in a genetic male, being predominantly confined to situations where underlying the pathology results in increased secretion of androgenic substances which result in virilization of the female genitalia, most commonly congenital adrenal hyperplasia or, rarely, a maternal tumor, for example a luteoma of pregnancy (Mazza et al, 2002).…”